Teen Vine stars enrage followers by telling girls how to be more attractive

VINE celebrity Nash Grier has woken up with the world hating him. At just 16, he was an online star until he made this video.

AJA ROMANO THE DAILY DOT

NewsComAuJanuary 1, 20147:29am

Cameron Grier went from star to jerk overnight.Source:YouTube

THIS internet celebrity spent his 16th birthday telling his female fans how to be attractive.

Just months after being touted as a "social media prodigy," Vine celebrity Nash Grier has learned the hard way that internet backlash spreads even more quickly than internet fame-especially if it's in response to sexism, The Daily Dot reported.

Grier just celebrated his 16th birthday with his 4.2 million followers on Vine-the third highest on the short video platform. But the North Carolina sophomore, whose following largely consists of teenage girls enamoured by his blue-eyed charm, did more than party over his Christmas vacation.

He also caused an internet uproar when his attempt to tell his young female audience "what guys look for in girls" backfired in a major way.

News_Rich_Media: What guys look for in girls

In a video Grier uploaded to YouTube five days before Christmas, he and his friends, 18-year-old fellow Vine star Cameron Dallas and 20-year-old YouTube star JC Caylen, attempt to tell their mostly female fans "What guys look for in girls."

In the nine-minute long segment, the boys describe their ideal girl as someone who can be entertaining, spontaneous, and fun, girls who can cook, and who can "make you a better you," i.e. improve the boys themselves. They criticise girls who they see as having no personalities and who are just waiting to marry rich husbands.

Then they move into more contentious territory: Caylen criticises girls with "fake tits," while Grier dislikes girls who are "obnoxious and loud." Then the boys talk about physical appearance, favouring girls who are short and petite, with "natural" looks and "really good smiles." They criticise girls who don't shave their facial and body hair, implying that "peach fuzz" and other types of natural hair on women is "gross."

News_Image_File: Grier giving the ladies his two cents.

Grier also tells girls that "the chase is such a big part" of what makes a girl appealing, encouraging them to "play hard to get."

"If you play too hard to get, then it's just like, 'oh, she doesn't even like me,' but if you play easy, then it's just like, oh, she's a whore," Grier states. "Find a balance."

"You can't be better than me" at playing video games, Dallas adds. "I mean I don't even play video games. You can't be better than me."

Grier's video stood for five days as it gathered major backlash over what many viewers felt were the boys' reinforcement of horrible beauty and behavioural standards in young women who already battle with low self-esteem. Among the prominent YouTubers who commented on Grier's video before it was deleted were comedy vlogger Lamarr Wilson and beloved Vlogbrother Hank Green.

News_Image_File: Fans were outraged. Picture: TumblrGrier deleted the video on Christmas Eve, though copies of it were quickly uploaded to other channels. And as some fans have pointed out, he's not the only one in his circle of teen boys with large fandoms on social networks to make these kinds of statements about women. Tumblr user macbookho took screengrabs of similar videos made by Caylen and other members of Caylen's YouTube group Our2ndLife, a collective channel of 6 popular male teen vloggers that has nearly a million YouTube subscribers.

Meanwhile, Grier's YouTube channel continued to grow in popularity. In the wake of the debate, it ballooned in a matter of days from 300,000 followers to over 430,000.